Abstract

More than one decade after the introduction of newborn hearing screening in Upper Austria, most children were still older than 6 months at enrolment in early intervention. In this study, under the guidance of health authorities, a revised screening and tracking protocol was developed by a network of early intervention providers and representatives of ENT, obstetrics, and pediatrics, including screening professionals and parents of children with hearing loss. Critical process indicators following internationally recommended benchmarks were defined and collected annually by the health authorities. Due to data protection issues, the data collection system was not personalized. Regular network meetings, case-oriented meetings, and screener training sessions were held. As a result, even without additional costs and within the legal constraints related to data protection in Austria, the proportion of children enrolled in early intervention before 6 months of age was significantly increased from 26% to 81% in two representative birth cohorts before and after the introduction of the new protocol, respectively. The coverage for bilateral screening increased from 91.4 to 97.6% of the total number of births.

Highlights

  • A recent meta-analysis of permanent hearing loss (HL) of ≥40 dB in the general neonatal population showed a prevalence of 1.33 per thousand for bilateral and 0.78 for unilateral loss [1]

  • This study aims to report the development and implementation of a low-cost tracking system to follow infants from newborn hearing screening (NHS) failure, through ENT confirmatory diagnosis, to enrolment in a family-centered early intervention (EI) in Upper Austria within the legal constraints of data protection in Austria

  • A high rate of screenings after birth and a young age at enrolment in EI can be regarded as the central process indicators of an effective NHS program

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A recent meta-analysis of permanent hearing loss (HL) of ≥40 dB in the general neonatal population showed a prevalence of 1.33 per thousand for bilateral and 0.78 for unilateral loss [1]. Another meta-analysis to estimate the prevalence of bilateral HL ≥ 26 dB detected by universal newborn hearing screening (NHS) in highly developed countries found a prevalence of 1.1 per 1000 children screened [2]. In addition to the effects of early diagnosis and provision with hearing technology, Holzinger et al [21] found significant effects for early enrolment in family-centered EI on language development at pre-school ages

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call